Santa Marta wren


The Santa Marta wren is a species of bird in the family Troglodytidae. It is endemic to Colombia.

Taxonomy and systematics

The Santa Marta wren has often been treated a subspecies of mountain wren. The South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society considers those two, ochraceous wren, rufous-browed wren, and tepui wren to be a superspecies.
The Santa Marta wren is monotypic.

Description

The Santa Marta wren is long. The adult's crown and upperparts are rufous brown with blackish barring on the lower back. The tail is brown and also has dark barring. It has a buffy supercilium and eyering. Its chin is pale buff that darkens to buffy brown on the throat and chest. Its flanks are buffy white with dark brown bars and the vent area white with blackish bars. The juvenile is similar but has dark tips on the feathers of the back and underparts.

Distribution and habitat

The Santa Marta wren is found only in the Sierra [Nevada de Santa Marta] of northern Colombia. It inhabits the edges of elfin forest, páramo, and scrub at tree line. In elevation it ranges from.

Behavior

Feeding

The Santa Marta wren forages from the ground to middle levels and sometimes joins mixed species foraging flocks. No information on its diet has been published.

Breeding

No information on the Santa Marta wren's breeding phenology has been published.

Vocalization

The Santa Marta wren's song has not been formally described. Its call is a repeated "di-di".

Status

The IUCN has assessed the Santa Marta wren as Critically Endangered. Its population is estimated to be fewer than 250 adults. It "is largely contained within Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta National Park; but, despite supposedly protected status of the area, forest destruction, overgrazing and burning continue almost unabated."